Maximus_Meridius said:
I'm kinda thinking it might have been an issue with the Raptor itself this time.
Maximus_Meridius said:
I'm kinda thinking it might have been an issue with the Raptor itself this time.
Part of the issue is they don't want to use draco/hypergolics on starship at all because the hope is the whole thing can some day be refueled/maintained from Mars (yes, this is a ways off). I think there was a scott Manley video last year discussing this; they work well but reliance on them if you're on Mars means basically you are really stuck if you run out of juice on an interplanetary trip but they think they can make methane and oxygen as needed some day on site.Kenneth_2003 said:
Ok, let me put it this way... Lots of sloshing in the fuel tanks leads to poor fuel flow to the fuel pumps in the engines. The header tanks, separate fuel tanks for the landing sequence were supposed to alleviate this but it appears that they have not. Ullage is the process of accelerating the vehicle in a desired direction to intentionally slosh the fuel towards the fuel lines. Apollo would do it with their attitude control thrusters for burns during thier journey to and from the moon.
The draco or super draco thrusters burn gaseous fuels rather than liquid fuels so sloshing isn't a problem. These are the names of the systems SpaceX already uses for maneuvering their Dragon capsule in space and as the escape system should they need to get away from a booster.
These are hypergolic fuels, so as soon as they touch they go boom. No ignition system required. Think dropping metallic sodium in water or baking soda and vinegar vs needing a spark plug in your car.
Well, you learn something everyday. I knew there were high speed ball/roller bearings for mills/CNC and such, but did not think they would be used in such a high HP/speed operation.TriAg2010 said:Maximus_Meridius said:
Unless I'm wrong (totally possible), they pretty much have to run journal bearings at those speeds and power ratings. Probably product lubricated, which makes life a lot more complicated.
There are roller bearings suitable for those speeds and loads. The SSME turbo pumps used one cylindrical roller bearing plus one ball bearing on the LH2 side and one cylindrical and two ball bearings on the LOX side. I can't think of any flying turbo machinery that uses journal bearings. Journal bearings are typically used on industrial machinery only.
Well, basically, I think. I could be wrong, but it's also why they don't use TEA-TEB to ignite the raptors (unlike the merlins). They use a spark ignition (which, again, might have been an issue on relight). I wish I could find the video I watched over xmas about this but I couldn't within 5 minutes so I gave up/lunch is ending.Kenneth_2003 said:
Gotcha. So the cold gas thrusters are LOX bleedoff? I know Falcon used N2, but I guess no reason you can't use the LOX.
Quote:
New president is making his space policy increasingly clear: America will remain grounded for the time being
You may be right about that, but it's not been documented/reported on anywhere about that being the case. Also, the Dem senators sending a letter about the importance of Artemis (moon program) probably means the Dems aren't going to gut the program/funding there, as well.Get Off My Lawn said:
My casual-watcher take is that the FAA knew that Trump was pushing for the moon and mars. The priority likely impacted the actions of individuals who knew that there could be ramifications for not playing nicely. Now that Trump is gone, the pressure has been released and risk-averse bureaucrats have returned to their natural state.
Quote:
First Tweet: It was foolish of us not to start 3 engines & immediately shut down 1, as 2 are needed to land
More Tweets:
Twitter: Will these changes be able to be implemented into the SN10 test flight?
Elon Musk: Yes.
Twitter: Wouldn't it be safer to light 3, and throttle 3 for landing just in case there's 1 engine failure?
Elon Musk: Yes, but engines have a min throttle point where there is flameout risk, so landing on 3 engines means high thrust/weight (further away from hover point), which is also risky
Twitter: So it will be determined which to cut off based on data available right after relight?
Elon Musk: Yeah. By default, engine with least lever arm would shut down if all 3 are good.
@Brendan2908: Here's what @elonmusk means by this tweet
Elon Musk: Yes
EDA: Someday the leverage arm won't matter as much when you go to hot gas thrusters though, right? Those will become a powerful source for the flip and the engines won't be as necessary, right? Or will the engines always light to aid in the flip even with hot gas thrusters?
Elon Musk: Intuitively, it would seem so, but turbopump-fed Raptors have much higher thrust & propellant mass fraction than pressure-fed gas thrusters & they're already there
Elon Musk: Higher Isp too
EDA: Oh right! That makes a lot of sense. I have kind of been snickering to myself thinking you're over there practicing this landing maneuver that will change and be obsolete the second you get hot gas thrusters Makes sense to continue the turn and burn! I love this stuff!
Elon Musk: That said, the ship landing burn has a clear solution. My greatest concern is achieving good payload to orbit with rapid & full reusability, without which we shall forever be confined to Earth.
Twitter: So does that mean for the time being you'll be sticking with cold gas rcs?
Elon Musk: Will still use hot gas maneuvering (RCS) thrusters, as ~5X more efficient than nitrogen (300 sec vs 60 sec Isp)
TexAgs91 said:
What are the risks if the Starship does a big fiery splat in the sand?
nortex97 said:
Also, the shockwaves wouldn't be an issue but for the handful/3 or so houses where folks refuse to sell out to SpaceX in Boca Chica Village. Not sure what 'other weather conditions' might apply for the launch as we all know they won't fly it if it's raining etc. I don't understand why it was ok for Jerry Jones to get the state to condemn folks property for takings for Jerry world, but SpaceX can't seem to get any help at all on it, yet here we are.
There is the same amount of risk with SN9 as with SN8. And did I mention it's in the middle of a bunch of sand? Plus they can blow it up if it veers off course.TriAg2010 said:TexAgs91 said:
What are the risks if the Starship does a big fiery splat in the sand?
It's for SpaceX to show there aren't any.
Musk said before the SN8 flight he expected a one-in-three chance at success. If the balance of expectations is that the test would result in a landing failure, then it was sort of ****ty to skip the homework to prove the failure would be benign, no?
You're being intentionally obtuse. The area had been evacuated.TriAg2010 said:
"It didn't hurt anyone last time..." is not how we do things.
Quote:
Given the communication problem, FAA investigated not only the SN8 hard landing but also did "a comprehensive review of the company's safety culture, operational decision-making and process discipline." The investigation was done quickly and changes were incorporated for SN9.
Just gonna say you, and bthougigem05 were spot on a couple months ago about this being harder than some of us thought.TriAg2010 said:aTmAg said:
Relighting engines is not that hard. Space X has been doing it for a long time, and the US in general has been doing it for decades.
I think you're downplaying the challenges here. Most of the restartable engines in the world are simple pressure-fed hypergolic engines where start-up is just opening a valve. A restartable cryogenic engine is a mark of an advanced propulsion system and the U.S. was basically alone in with this capability for a long time. Europe didn't have this capability until 2005 and I don't think Russia or China have ever flown one. Even the cryogenic restartable engines the U.S. has flown - like RL10 and J-2 - are comparatively simple cycles compared to the staged combustion used by Raptor. This is a step change in complexity over anything SpaceX has done with the Merlin or what others have flown. It's closer to say, a restartable Space Shuttle Main Engine.
bmks270 said:Quote:
Given the communication problem, FAA investigated not only the SN8 hard landing but also did "a comprehensive review of the company's safety culture, operational decision-making and process discipline." The investigation was done quickly and changes were incorporated for SN9.
To some extent this is subjective opinion and dependent on an individuals temperament, but in brief chats with former SpaceX engineers, Id say they set a low bar for " safety culture, operational decision-making and process discipline."
I doubt it went far beyond making sure no one is nearby, and answering some questions from the government. Then fire it up in clear weather and see what happens.
At the opposite extreme is NASA which is so risk averse, then end up not accomplishing anything. I know a former NASA engineer who said the extremely low risk tolerance prevented them from accomplishing anything and took the fun out of working there. Too many meetings, reviews, etc. to do small things or make any changes.
JobSecurity said:bmks270 said:Quote:
Given the communication problem, FAA investigated not only the SN8 hard landing but also did "a comprehensive review of the company's safety culture, operational decision-making and process discipline." The investigation was done quickly and changes were incorporated for SN9.
To some extent this is subjective opinion and dependent on an individuals temperament, but in brief chats with former SpaceX engineers, Id say they set a low bar for " safety culture, operational decision-making and process discipline."
I doubt it went far beyond making sure no one is nearby, and answering some questions from the government. Then fire it up in clear weather and see what happens.
At the opposite extreme is NASA which is so risk averse, then end up not accomplishing anything. I know a former NASA engineer who said the extremely low risk tolerance prevented them from accomplishing anything and took the fun out of working there. Too many meetings, reviews, etc. to do small things or make any changes.
Is that not safe? Rapid trials and iteration is the key to private industry efficiency in a field like this. Would take NASA years between tests and they do it in weeks. Get the FAA tf out of "culture" investigations
TexAgs91 said:You're being intentionally obtuse. The area had been evacuated.TriAg2010 said:
"It didn't hurt anyone last time..." is not how we do things.
Decay said:
I think this whole FAA aspect is because rocketry rarely blows up on the ground anymore - nearly all rocket accidents lately have been after launch and they're a ways away. I can think of maybe Proton (where they inverted an instrument and it came back down) and maybe a Chinese vehicle that exploded on the pad?
I think SpaceX is kinda the only organization actually blowing up rockets near landing pads anymore. Different acoustic modeling, also you're by definition as close to bystanders as you will ever be during the flight.
Totally unrelated, but kinda related... but a Scott Manley video a while back got me to thinking.... Someone was putting a satellite in orbit that was going to rendezvous with a satellite in Geostationary orbit, lock onto it's engine bell, and essentially become the tow truck that would enable the far more expensive unit to maintain orbit and continue its mission vs deorbit and a costly replacement.nortex97 said:Part of the issue is they don't want to use draco/hypergolics on starship at all because the hope is the whole thing can some day be refueled/maintained from Mars (yes, this is a ways off). I think there was a scott Manley video last year discussing this; they work well but reliance on them if you're on Mars means basically you are really stuck if you run out of juice on an interplanetary trip but they think they can make methane and oxygen as needed some day on site.Kenneth_2003 said:
Ok, let me put it this way... Lots of sloshing in the fuel tanks leads to poor fuel flow to the fuel pumps in the engines. The header tanks, separate fuel tanks for the landing sequence were supposed to alleviate this but it appears that they have not. Ullage is the process of accelerating the vehicle in a desired direction to intentionally slosh the fuel towards the fuel lines. Apollo would do it with their attitude control thrusters for burns during thier journey to and from the moon.
The draco or super draco thrusters burn gaseous fuels rather than liquid fuels so sloshing isn't a problem. These are the names of the systems SpaceX already uses for maneuvering their Dragon capsule in space and as the escape system should they need to get away from a booster.
These are hypergolic fuels, so as soon as they touch they go boom. No ignition system required. Think dropping metallic sodium in water or baking soda and vinegar vs needing a spark plug in your car.